Part, chapter

 1    1,    1|     without regret, that it was nearly empty.~“Must get some more,”
 2    1,    2|         rested also, for he had nearly reached that degree of exhaustion
 3    1,    3|       for about a mile, and for nearly the same distance to the
 4    1,    6|  particularly the “ibiriratea,” nearly black in its skin, and so
 5    1,    7|        of the elephant, already nearly undiscoverable on the banks
 6    1,   10|       her daughter, and Manoel, nearly always formed a group apart,
 7    1,   12|      estimated at four hundred, nearly all Indians, comprising,
 8    1,   12|      composed of nine soldiers, nearly all Indians, and a sergeant,
 9    1,   12|         dare not say. Now it is nearly a year since I was at Tabatinga;
10    1,   12|         and the young, in their nearly primitive costume, looking
11    1,   12|    these wealthy heads of hair, nearly all remarkable for their
12    1,   16|       the fashionable, who were nearly stifled in their European
13    1,   16| stifling streets which were not nearly so pleasant as the shady
14    1,   17|         southwest, and measures nearly five thousand feet across
15    2,    2|         the brave woman, though nearly crushed by this sudden blow,
16    2,   14|        Jarriquez, with his head nearly splitting, arose and paced
17    2,   17|       so dearly loved his heart nearly failed him. But the husband—
18    2,   18|     with a hand whose agitation nearly prevented him from writing
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